23. Chiefs: TE- Austin Seferian-Jenkins, Washington
You probably just got disappointed with me for the second time. Marqise Lee is still on the board and I don't take him. Not many tight ends can run a wheel route like Seferian-Jenkins at his size and with his speed. The three tight end sets the Chiefs ran in training camp were fun to watch because they created so many options and mismatches in the red zone. I want you to think back to Jamaal Charles' receiving touchdowns in the Giants and Cowboy games. You have three to four different options a team must honor going on at the same time. That was how effective these play designs were.

Seferian-Jenkins would give Alex Smith a receiver with a reliable catch radius. He also gives him a consistent route runner. When I looked at his tape again, I saw the No. 1 thing in an Andy Reid system: he understood the holes in a defense and sat down in them.

Seferian-Jenkins had a DUI in 2013 but he responded very well to those questions at the Combine by taking ownership of his actions. He didn't blame anyone else. His interview reminded me a lot of Kyle Long the previous year.

23. Chiefs: TE- Austin Seferian-Jenkins, Washington
You probably just got disappointed with me for the second time. Marqise Lee is still on the board and I don't take him. Not many tight ends can run a wheel route like Seferian-Jenkins at his size and with his speed. The three tight end sets the Chiefs ran in training camp were fun to watch because they created so many options and mismatches in the red zone. I want you to think back to Jamaal Charles' receiving touchdowns in the Giants and Cowboy games. You have three to four different options a team must honor going on at the same time. That was how effective these play designs were.

Seferian-Jenkins would give Alex Smith a receiver with a reliable catch radius. He also gives him a consistent route runner. When I looked at his tape again, I saw the No. 1 thing in an Andy Reid system: he understood the holes in a defense and sat down in them.

Seferian-Jenkins had a DUI in 2013 but he responded very well to those questions at the Combine by taking ownership of his actions. He didn't blame anyone else. His interview reminded me a lot of Kyle Long the previous year.

I'd actually rather take Jenkins than Lee. Will allow Reid to truly run a dominant double TE set like he's always wanted to do.

Pretty much just went BPA according to their boards. All the picks were within the top 5 or so with the exception of the 6th round where I went for depth players as the top picks were mostly repeat positions.

I'd actually rather take Jenkins than Lee. Will allow Reid to truly run a dominant double TE set like he's always wanted to do.

same here.

Kirwan's latest mock
23. Kansas City Chiefs -- Brandin Cooks, WR, Oregon State: Here's a solid young man who handles himself like a pro already and he plays a position the Chiefs need to upgrade. Andy Reid will see the "DeSean Jackson" model in Cooks.

Schrager's Mock Draft 4.0
23. Kansas City Chiefs: Marqise Lee, WR, USC: This is more about fit than anything else. Lee is a classic West Coast offense receiver and Andy Reid’s offense is the West Coast offense that’d best suit him. Most teams have Oregon State’s Brandin Cooks rated higher than Lee, but for Kansas City, Lee’s the guy.

NFL mock draft: Reporters make selections
23. Kansas City (Adam Teicher, ESPN.com) FS Calvin Pryor, Louisville — "The Chiefs need to fix the back end of their defense. If Pryor is still on the board, they will take a hard look at him."

(11-5) Xavier Su'a-Filo, OG, UCLA: With three blockers lost to free agency -- including Pro Bowl tackle Branden Albert -- former offensive line coach Andy Reid's top priority may be addressing the front wall. Su'a-Filo is reliable in pass protection and has the athletic ability to get out and block at the second level, traits that make him an ideal fit in Andy Reid's screen-heavy offense.